
Presently Not Available
| Code No. | Description | Net Vol. | Price |
| Code 1020 | Essex Botanical | 32 fl. oz. (950 ml.) | $18.95 |
| Code 1021 | Hoxiac | 32 fl. oz. (950 ml.) | $18.95 |
| Code 1022 | Mojave Nectar | 32 fl. oz. (950 ml.) | $18.95 |
| Code 1023 | Potassium Iodide 16% Hoxsey Solution |
8 fl. oz. (236 ml.) | $ 9.95 |
The "essiac formula" casts an enormous shadow among branded names in the North American herbal community. Behind the product is the true life legend of "Cancer nurse" Rene Caisse ("essiac" is Nurse Rene's last name spelled backwards). During the life of her clinic (1934 to 1942), Caisse is reported to have cured many hundreds of cancer -- of varying types and stages of development -- and for free. (In fact, 55,000 Canadians signed her petition to the Ontario Legislature in favor of her treatment, in addition to 387 patients and an uncounted number of medical doctors). She did it primarily on the strength of just one product, which became known as "essiac."
But Caisse did not invent the essiac formula (the lower case "e" is intentional: Essiac® is a registered trademark owned by Dr. Pierre Gaulin (U.S.) and Terry Maloney (Canada)). The basis for the formula is rooted in native Ojibway (a tribe native to Ontario) medicine.
Far more dramatic than even the "essiac story," is the true life of Harry Hoxsey. (We discuss Hoxsey's work in several other places on this site, and even provide a free and unabridged viewing of Kenny Ausubel's movie, Hoxsey: How Healing Becomes a Crime, which you can purchase elsewhere on the web, along with the book -- same title.) Few stories in this business elicit such deep pathos, and few figures in the last century are as polarizing between the forces of orthodoxy and those of the alternative community as that of Hoxsey.
No doubt, Hoxsey's personal style lent itself to those who would simply dismiss him as a quack. But the many hundreds of cured cancer patients who managed to show up at Hoxsey's trials to testify -- hundreds out of thousands of documented cases, served only to delay the inevitable: the closing of Hoxsey's 17 successful cancer clinics and the exodus of his legacy to Tijuana, Mexico, which would be run by his protege, Mildred Nelson (yes, another nurse -- and though she has passed on, the "Hoxsey Clinic" still operates today.)
We know from the many people who have been to the Hoxsey clinic in Mexico that their internal remedies fail a large percentage of users. But, like Essiac, should the "Hoxsey formula" be used as a cancer treatment system? Or as an adjunctive product, taken for its nutraceutical benefits? We would suggest the later.
![]() The ingredient particulars of the original internal Hoxsey formula have been well-documented, and many formulas (including Hoxsaic) that use his name or allude to his work leave out, for one reason or another, a crucial ingredient that even Hoxsey himself said was crucial to making his internal formula "work" --- potassium iodide, 7.7% to be precise, in his original tonic. (We discussed this ingredient and its use quite briefly in our Lugol's Iodine page, which users of this formula are advised to read in its entirety.) What we have done, for those who want to try or experiment with the original Hoxsey formula, is created stabilized potassium iodide formula that is calibrated so that if you add it 50/50 with Hoxsiac or similar cancerolytic herb formulas, you will be imitating, in exact proportion, the potassium iodide in the original formula. Note that this product is nowhere near as strong, as an oxidizing agent, as Lugol's, nonetheless, you should take care in using this formula. Like all nutrients, you can overdue your iodine intake (Dr. J.C. Jarvis, M.D. notes, among other things, that a "moist nose" will develop if you overdue it -- again, discussed on the Lugol's page. U.S. Users: please note the usual legal caveat found in the upper right hand corner of this page. Ingredients: Distilled water, potassium iodide (16%), grain alcohol (10% by weight, 96% purity).
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The third in our current series of natural North American herbal medicinal tonics centers on the yucca -- a prized botanical used extensively by native tribes of the Southwestern U.S. and Northern Baja California (Mexico). A common practice among indigenous desert tribes was to dry the fleshy fruits and eat them during the winter; a fermented drink was also prepared from the yucca fruit.
| To U.S. Users: The information presented on this page and the products discussed have not been evaluated by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. |
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